Paul Fletcher MP

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  • Five Years of Broadband Policy Failure from Labor

    Paul Fletcher’s Broadband Briefing

    Five years after Labor announced its broadband policy, Australia’s broadband penetration ranking has dropped and Labor’s policy has made zero difference to the broadband service received by 99.9 per cent of Australians.

    Written on Friday, 18 May 2012 00:00 in Broadband Briefing Read 4 times Read more...
  • Principal's Courageous Action Highlights Threat of Cyberbullying

    A Queensland Principal's decisive and courageous action - threatening to expel children under 13 with Facebook profiles - highlights the real dangers of unrestricted social media use by children too young to judge the risks involved, said Paul Fletcher MP, Chair of the Coalition's Online Safety Working Group.

    Written on Friday, 18 May 2012 00:00 in Media Releases Read 1 times Read more...
  • Bradfield Community Meeting Calls on Gillard to Apologise

    A Community Meeting held by Paul Fletcher MP, Member for Bradfield has resolved to call on Prime Minister Julia Gillard to apologise for her divisive and inappropriate comments about Sydney’s North Shore.

    Written on Friday, 18 May 2012 00:00 in Media Releases Read 1 times Read more...
  • Investors defrauded of $176 million in Trio collapse, parliamentary committee finds

    Over 6000 Australian superannuation and other investors were defrauded of $176 million in the Trio scandal according to a Parliamentary Committee report just released, Member for Bradfield Paul Fletcher said today.

    Mr Fletcher, a member of the Parliament's Corporations and Financial Services Committee, said the Committee began its inquiry last year on his recommendation, after he was approached by constituents who had lost money in the collapse of Trio.

    Written on Friday, 18 May 2012 00:00 in Media Releases Read 1 times Read more...
  • Schoolkids Bonus Budget Measures

    Mr FLETCHER (Bradfield) (10:51): I am pleased to rise to speak on the Family Assistance and Other Legislation Amendment (Schoolkids Bonus Budget Measures) Bill 2012. Let me start by noting that the process under which the House of Representatives is being asked to consider this bill is a deeply deficient one. The first official announcement of this measure was in the Treasurer's budget speech last night. We now have a bill which was introduced this morning that was only available to members of the House to review from 9.30 this morning.

    Written on Tuesday, 15 May 2012 00:00 in Parliamentary Speeches Read 30 times Read more...

Paul Fletcher MP - Federal Member for Bradfield - Liberal Party

Why does the Coalition not support Labor’s National Broadband Network?

The Gillard Government’s $43 billion National Broadband Network is a risky plan that lacks transparency, stifles competition and will lead to higher prices for internet access.  It has been launched without any detailed evaluation of its costs and benefits.

There is no doubt that some parts of Australia suffer from poor broadband services – in particular regional and remote areas, and ‘black spots’ in the suburbs of the major cities where access to ADSL is constrained. The Coalition is committed to addressing these deficiencies and investing in improved fixed, wireless and satellite services.  In fact, had the Coalition been elected in 2007, vastly improved broadband would already be available in most regional and remote areas.

However, there are key problems with the Gillard Government’s proposal to connect every house in Australia with fibre:

  • • The NBN will increase the cost of the internet.  After 15 years of falling real internet prices, the Government’s implementation report forecasts the NBN will steadily increase real prices over the next 10 years to try and earn a return on its investment.
  • • The NBN will duplicate existing infrastructure and therefore waste money. Private companies have spent billions building fibre, copper and HFC networks which NBN now plans to duplicate, overbuild or tear up.
  • • The NBN will hurt consumers by removing choice.  NBN’s deal with Telstra will mean removal of the copper network across most of Australia – whether customers want it or not. Labor is considering placing other obstacles in the way of potential competitors. These arrangements will very likely breach laws protecting consumers and promoting competition and can only be rendered lawful by special legislation.
  • • The NBN is unlikely to deliver value for money.  The implementation report relies on ambitious assumptions to suggest taxpayers won’t lose money.  For instance, it assumes customer take-up of between 70% and 90%.  Similar fibre roll-outs have attracted take-up rates of only 25% in the US and 40% in South Korea.
  • • The NBN will not provide what recent trends show that consumers want most of all - mobility.  Telstra reports that demand for wireless broadband has grown by 109% annually over the past three years.  Over the same period demand for fixed broadband has been relatively stagnant. The implementation study courageously assumes that the arrival of the NBN will reverse this trend.

Despite all these concerns, the Government refuses to conduct a thorough economic analysis of the project or consider any alternative approaches to improving broadband services. Having established a high powered agency, Infrastructure Australia, to assess national infrastructure priorities, the Government has refused to allow it to evaluate the NBN.

The Coalition will continue to hold the Gillard Government to account on the NBN and offer common sense, affordable alternative policies that ensure all Australians have access to high-standard broadband services at reasonable prices.

Authorised by Paul Fletcher MP, Suite 8, 12 Tryon Road, Lindfield, NSW 2070.

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